Does Government Science Funding Drive Innovation? (wsj.com) 248
An anonymous reader writes: In a Wall Street Journal op-ed piece, British businessman and science journalist Matt Ridley argues that basic science research does not lead to technological innovation, and therefore isn't deserving of taxpayer funding. Ridley says, "Increasingly, technology is developing the kind of autonomy that hitherto characterized biological entities. The Stanford economist Brian Arthur argues that technology is self-organizing and can, in effect, reproduce and adapt to its environment. ... The implications of this new way of seeing technology—as an autonomous, evolving entity that continues to progress whoever is in charge—are startling. People are pawns in a process. We ride rather than drive the innovation wave. Technology will find its inventors, rather than vice versa.
Patents and copyright laws grant too much credit and reward to individuals and imply that technology evolves by jerks. Recall that the original rationale for granting patents was not to reward inventors with monopoly profits but to encourage them to share their inventions. ... It follows that there is less need for government to fund science: Industry will do this itself. Having made innovations, it will then pay for research into the principles behind them. Having invented the steam engine, it will pay for thermodynamics."
Patents and copyright laws grant too much credit and reward to individuals and imply that technology evolves by jerks. Recall that the original rationale for granting patents was not to reward inventors with monopoly profits but to encourage them to share their inventions. ... It follows that there is less need for government to fund science: Industry will do this itself. Having made innovations, it will then pay for research into the principles behind them. Having invented the steam engine, it will pay for thermodynamics."
God drives innovation (Score:3, Funny)
God drives innovation by speaking to the blessed prophets we call 'scientists'. Government funding has no effect on who He chooses to bless with this new knowledge.
These folks know nothing of science. (Score:5, Insightful)
"Having made innovations, it will then pay for research into the principles behind them. Having invented the steam engine, it will pay for thermodynamics."
Oh, brother. That's just ridiculous. It was an understanding of thermodynamics (by the physicist Denis Papin) that led to the innovation of the steam engine. They imply that some guy messing around in his basement will "innovate" something and only later will the principles behind it be understood. But it is basic research and the building of mathematical models of the world that lead to inventions. And those steps in basic science are not profitable. Many blind alleys will be followed before a basic advance in science is made. Only a government dedicated to basic research will follow that path for long enough to see solid usable results.
And if occasionally a private company does advance the frontiers of real science, that's great. But I wouldn't count on that for the progress of mankind. I do agree however with the author's premise that patents are abused. Folks have forgotten why we have a patent system. It's not to make money, it's to advance the sciences. Don't believe me? Just read Art. 1, Sec. 8 of the US Constitution.
Re:These folks know nothing of science. (Score:4, Informative)
Not to disagree with your point but the Americans seem to be the first to group copyright and patents together.
Modern copyright law was based on advancing learning which is what was meant in late 18th century English by the "Arts and Sciences" and the Statute of Anne was properly titled something like "An act for the encouragement of learning by giving a limited monopoly on writings"
Patents historically were about advancing manufacturing, often abused to give an income to the Crown, eg selling a patent on salt. The first modern patent law, at least in common law countries, was the "Statute of Monopolies" passed in 1624 which revoked most monopolies excepting those granted for new "methods of manufacture" with "manufacture" at the time covering both creation and design and lasted for up to 14 years. Note that there was no disclosure clause, perhaps because disclosure was considered automatic in that simpler time.
Also of interest in the act was it removed private monopolies on dispensing justice and enforcing penal laws. In other words the start of government having the sole right to violence to enforce law.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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the thermodynamic effects for steam engine were 'common sense' known for a long while before practical steam engines emerged.
it was in fact manufacturing advances that made them viable().
that is, ideas/theories are a dime a dozen but actually making them reality is much rarer. basically, it's kind of right to say that funding basic research doesn't yield innovations, which is doublespeak for commercial inventions.
I don't understand though why waste government money on basic research in a country that has th
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except some has to pay for that basic research. if it wasn't for ARPA designing new networks, and then for some university under military contracts to link together that the internet was born.
We have passed the point where new tech will spontaneously appear. Someone can't snap their fingers and invent anti gravity hover boards. it takes a lot of basic science, and the few hoverboads out this year are based on principals figured out in grants 40+ years ago.
Worse. Invisible hand of tech will spawn people. (Score:2)
They imply that some guy messing around in his basement will "innovate" something and only later will the principles behind it be understood.
The Will of the Force will impregnate a poor slave-woman and she shall give birth to one who will bring balance to the Force.
The implications of this new way of seeing technologyâ"as an autonomous, evolving entity that continues to progress whoever is in chargeâ"are startling. People are pawns in a process. We ride rather than drive the innovation wave. Technology will find its inventors, rather than vice versa.
Technology creates itself apparently.
I'm guessing somewhere along the way we came up with both AI and perpetuum mobile and they have since then been hiding somewhere in the jungle and fucking their transistors out, spawning new tech.
Occasionally, a random person will get "abducted by aliens", implanted necessary information and let loose to "invent" new technology.
So, I'm not saying i
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They understand science, they just want to fully monetize it like they want to monetize/privatize everything. Their "ignorance" is willful. People like Ridley know that what they are saying is pure bunk, but as long as enough "journalists" and government officials believe him (or just use his nonsense as cover), the corporations looking to make a buck will lobby the crap out of Congress to defund the NIH and give the money to pharmaceutical companies instead. Industry does not invent things, they monetize t
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Hero of Alexandria worked for a government funded research institution. Whether his work was based on any sort of pure theory or it was just pure experimentation, the end result was not a product of "market economics".
Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
If anything, government needs to be more strict with publicly funded research and ensure that the results end up in the public domain rather than rotting while a patent expires or hidden behind a pay-walled journal.
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Re:Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
1. The author is marketing his book.
2. The premise is on the monetary worth of the research done, not it's importance. If the government would ask corporations to pay for the tech it developed at the current rates, they'd go bankrupt and pay for decades to come.
He's also using CERN as an example, completely ignoring research such as the nuclear power plants, and more recently the Stellarator.
I'm curious if in his book, after bashing the government's if he shows how much money is spent on royalties well past their expiration date, on battling trolls and other statistics that show the "value".
Starting to feel the need for a plugin that replaces economist with "Idiot with a degree" to make articles like this easier to stomach.
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The worst example in the article: "the discovery of the structure of DNA depended heavily on X-ray crystallography of biological molecules, a technique developed in the wool industry to try to improve textiles." This is just fantasy. The wool industry did indeed perform such research many decades ago (just as the pharma industry uses crystallography to design better drugs), but the technique itself was developed entirely by (mostly British and German) academics working over many decades. Companies have
Re:Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Someone wants to make an argument that government investment into science and technology doesn't lead to anything useful on the internet? There's a lot of great technology we have today due to government investment.
Yeah... the internet, for example. :-)
Re:Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
His 'argument' there pretty much boils down to: "it was going to be invented anyway"
To most people, the argument for public funding of science rests on a list of the discoveries made with public funds, from the Internet (defense science in the U.S.) to the Higgs boson (particle physics at CERN in Switzerland). But that is highly misleading. Given that government has funded science munificently from its huge tax take, it would be odd if it had not found out something. This tells us nothing about what would have been discovered by alternative funding arrangements.
There is some merit to the idea that all useful inventions will inevitably be done (the concept of technological determinism / technological imperative has been around for decades), but it is still idiotic to use that as an argument against government funding, as that line of thinking says nothing about when the inevitable will happen. A world in which the internet was invented 10 years later is not equivalent (and dare I say unpreferable) to ours.
There are too many other ways in which the reasoning in TFA is obviously flawed. Considering that you have to ask yourself the question:
Why the hell is this low quality shit even on Slashdot?
Re:Really? (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't think the internet would ever have been invented by private industry as there is no profit in it. Private industry was busy inventing walled gardens, AOL, CompuServe and of course Win95 originally shipped with MSN, not a web browser.
Here we are over a quarter of a century later and the internet is being twisted into walled gardens (Facebook, the Apple Store etc) as they're more profitable.
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I completely agree on your point. That said:
Windows 95 had Internet Explorer 1.0. I'm pretty sure it was included on the non-OEM disks, but it was definitely included on disks that came with Digital Equipment and Gateway 2000 machines.
It didn't do much, but it was enough for my coworkers and I to set up a little "mini-web" on the network shares. I learned HTML before I ever used the internet :)
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From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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If the government hadn't paid for the research that led to the internet and the WWW, it would be nothing like it is today. Net neutrality wouldn't even be an idea. It would be glorified cable TV, like AOL and Compuserve used to be.
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Can you elaborate?
I haven't read into the history much, but I do know the transistor was developed at Bell Labs, not a university.
Of course, one can argue that AT&T only kept Bell Labs around because they had a guaranteed revenue stream and could think long-term.
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Where are all the people who voted for this submission? The comment section is pretty much unanimously opposed to both the message and the form of TFA.
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> The space program and the Internet are examples of military spending by the government.
The American space program was indeed civilian and academic. There were other rocket programs dedicated to killing people.
Once you have Sputnik in orbit, the military part of your space program is pretty much done. You already have your ICBM that you can used to rain down nukes on your enemy.
It's HOW, not who (Score:2)
Early research in electronic computers, and early integrated circuits were driven heavily by military spending, and later gov't space exploration. Although they didn't directly invent much of it, they drove contractor R&D because they were buying.
One could say that they were created in the process of solving specific problems, like making missile electronics smaller rather than "direct" research into smaller electronics.
In that sense I agree with TFA: innovations usually come about from trying to solve
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"Someone wants to make an argument that government investment into science and technology doesn't lead to anything useful on the internet?"
No one but you.
In fact, this is the most astounding case of non-sequitur I've seen in quite long years reading on Slashdot, because it percolates both the article, its abstract and most of the comments. Quite a feat.
The article and the abstract basically reduce to "technology this, technology that, therefore basic science..." What!?
Now, what about you? Assuming the arti
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It is a lot more complicated.
Would we have had the Internet without government funding?
The basic technology of the Internet isn't really that complicated
It is a really valid argument that technology evolves and as computers/networking developed, we would have developed something like the internet.
Heck, I'm seeing this now in Canada. I've worked in Industry that has links with government. More and more team ups with universities... Oddly, I don't really see anything ground breaking that is actually put to us
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"Sure wish that they would spread the wealth around a bit more though."
That sounds pretty socialist for a libertarian.
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You do know that libertarianism was originally a socialist ideal and was that way for a hundred years before the Americans twisted it into its current entitlement form (I got mine and its mine)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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No, most of us Libertarians are much the same as we've always been. We're just not coordinated enough to take the mic away from the stupid people who claim to represent the party (while being registered Republicans, no less). No, we're still much the same. I'm much further left than any elected Democrat and I'm far more likely to vote for Sanders than I am for any other candidate, at this time. You're being hoodwinked, as well. Dig a little deeper - contact your local party officials. Ayn Rand was an idiot
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The problem is that libertarianism, like most isms, encompasses a bunch of different believes. At heart it is just the opposite of authoritarianism but there is the modern wing who as you say, vote Republican or Conservative here and seem to just want to be petty authoritarians. You see it here with certain posters, and those posters would never vote for Sanders, yet call themselves Libertarian.
Re:Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's an amusing thing... As you may know, I sold my business. I modeled traffic. It was pretty lucrative. I had a couple hundred employees in five different offices. I could say, "I've got mine, fuck you." I'm telling you, right now, that I really think you should be supporting Sanders. He's the best chance you've got. Will I pay more? Yup. I'm okay with that. I already pay more than I'm obligated to by way of donations to worthy causes. I pay more than I'm able to use to reduce my tax burden, even. I do it because it's the responsible thing to do. I do it because I'm not a selfish prick who thinks he got here of his own efforts and without the need of anyone else. I've eaten Ramen noodles. Hell, that's more than some had.
I'm sometimes confused for a socialist. No, I don't agree with their authoritarian behavior. I don't agree that they should be able to determine how I think and I don't think they'll be concerned with my rights as an individual. Sanders is not an extreme socialist, not at all. I'm probably further left than he - but for a whole different reason. See, I'm not a socialist because I reasoned my way to the conclusions I have reached. I didn't emote my way here. I want a strong, healthy, educated, safe, and productive society because it's better for everyone and is the best chance we have to actually make use of our rights and preserve our freedoms. Also, I don't want you stealing my shit because you don't have any of your own shit to keep you occupied. It's cheaper and simpler to prevent problems than it is to fix them.
So, much of my ideology actually has a similar outcome to socialism but without the draconian oversight, rights restrictions, and otherwise silly stuff. Sanders is fairly close to an ideal candidate - not an exact match. He's not best for my wallet, bank account, or investments. He's what's best for you. I'm not a selfish prick. I want what's best for you - because that's also best for me. I'm not an altruist, either. Damned right, I want you educated and working. I want you to be able to have something to fall back on. I want you healthy, I support (strongly) single payer health care. I support, strongly, reasonable taxation on wealth (we can argue where those lines should be).
I still employ a few people, domestic type stuff, and I pay a lower tax rate than they do. I know why - I'm taxed on capital gains and this means I'm taxed at a lower rate to encourage investment. True... I'm not going to stop making money just because you take some more of it. Hell, I had no idea that it was this lucrative. I actually have more money now than I had when I sold my business - and trust me, that wasn't easy to do - I made a goodly sum of cash from that. I retired at 50, eight years ago! I don't even *have* to invest. I can spend like a drunken sailor and be okay. I just like poking buttons.
Anyhow, it's maddening, at times, to be told what I believe and what I stand for. This comes from people who don't even understand the differences between rights and freedoms. They'll sit there, and argue, telling me how I think. I explain and the next thread, some of them, repeat the same damned idiocy. They're like Pavlovian dogs. It's like they've been trained to ignore something, perhaps like The Allegory of the Cave (Plato?) or something. I don't get it... I simply don't understand. This is not true in every case, I've reached a number of people and they've since learned the differences between a caricature and the real thing. There are still a bunch that don't get it.
Ah well... I suspect that you understand. You seem to. I just figured I'd elaborate for those who don't as well as vent some steam. Also, for those who do not understand the differences between rights and freedoms... Well... I like to phrase it like this: "I have the freedom to kill you. I do not have the right to do so. I am not at liberty to take your life."
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Thanks for this.
As a fellow member of the 1% who is also a Sanders backer for much the same reasone, let me just say to you and the WSJ editorial page (people read that without grunting?) that you are not alone.
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The problem with socialism is that it it has to be "built". In "building socialism" you end up with all of the flaws and abuses that socialists would like to disown.
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I'm willing to pay extra in taxes to make sure you get the mental help you need. You're a fine example of why we need single payer health care.
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I'll try to get word out. In the meantime, is there a good name for the current adulteration? It's not quite fascism but not Free Market either.
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Why are you beating that strawman? Not one thing you argued has anything to do with what he said. "the flaw in the basic premise is so obvious its absurd." Indeed. Yet you didn't actually respond to anything, at all, in the post you replied to. You made a bunch of incorrect assumptions and thought you were being witty. We know who is absurd, now don't we?
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Try getting by without fundamental science... (Score:5, Interesting)
I would add that this was about the time this country started the decline we find ourselves living in now.
Thanks Obama.
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Who the hell do you have doing your accounting? Research is still an itemized expense account listing and is untaxed. You're pretty much only taxed on profits. I sure as hell hope you're not in accounting. We did *loads* of research - including paying (sponsoring) university research. No, that shit's written off.
Seriously? You don't actually know anything about the tax code or own a business that does research of any kind, do you? If so then you need to hire a professional.
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Guiding Hands (Score:5, Insightful)
It's almost as if taxpayer funding is only wasteful and frivolous if it benefits other people, and "libertarianism" is just a thin rhetorical cover for preserving privilege.
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I am a self-identified libertarian who believes there is a need to rein in government spending. I also believe that the government funding what I call "pure research science" is beneficial for everyone. For example, up until recently space travel was expensive and required domain-specific knowledge that would be hard to find at a random corporation. In addition, there were only a handful of companies that had the excess funds required to delve into space travel. Ergo, I think NASA was a decent investment at
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Shh! You're ruining his rant with facts. I've begun self-identifying as a "Classic Libertarian." It's easier. I don't have time to clean up after the people who (and we both know they exist) confuse Libertarianism with an economic model and a political ideology. The fact of the matter is, most Libertarians (not the noisy ones who are actually registered Republicans) are pretty damned far to the left. We're left, albeit for different reasons, and yet not typically extremists - at least by my contacts and I'v
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You don't actually know any Libertarians, do you? If you're open minded and are willing to admit you're not actually associated with any then I'm free to answer any questions you may have. I can only represent myself, not the party, though I am running for a state office as an official party candidate in 2016. No, you can't vote for me, probably, as it's for the State Senate in Maine.
So, if you actually want to know what a Libertarian is, what we think, or how we make our decisions then I'm available to ans
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One can espouse a more nuanced view without requiring the 'natural consequence' ( ie slippery slope). Must one decry democracy if the natural consequence is everyone being required to vote on every decision? Nice stereotyping though. Could you impugn our collective sexual prowess as well?
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How odd... Are you a Libertarian? Why would you speak for one and say what is and isn't a non-libertarian position? Are you aware that Libertarianism is a political ideology and not an economic model? I'm an actual registered Libertarian, running for office in 2016 for an open seat in my home state, and could easily accept a reasoned argument for a basic income. My reasoning is likely different than your own and I'd call you an idiot for doing it for your *likely* reasoning but that doesn't mean I'd not acc
He says this on the Internet (Score:3)
The only thing stupider would be if he was drinking a tall glass of Tang while he was posting his story about how government investment in research doesn't lead to anything useful...on the Internet.
Ridley opposes state aid unless for himself (Score:5, Insightful)
There is an old adage; everyone hates government spending except the government spending they benefit from themselves. In this case, almost every article Matt Ridley writes says how bad state aid is. Except when he was head of a bank himself, when times were tough he went to parliament with his hat in his hand to beg for a taxpayer bailout and suddenly state aid was a great idea: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Ridley#Northern_Rock
If you want to change Matt Ridley's mind about state spending on research, give him a job in a research lab and watch with wonder as articles praising state aid for research emanate from his greedy mind.
My favorite moments of the last prez election (Score:2)
While I'm on
Libertarian Claptrap (Score:2)
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As a long-term party member, this guy in the article is a fucking idiot and needs to shut the fuck up.
Simple enough? ;-)
Yes, I am a Libertarian. I'm often mistaken for a Socialist for some odd reason. I am not a Socialist. I arrived at my conclusions via reasoning and not emotions. I am also not a zealot and recognize that no one pure political ideology will ever work without totalitarianism being included. There is no pure political ideology that works without force.
Also, Rand was an idiot.
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Mostly the US government's dollar.
Citation needed.
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To be a bit more precise: 24% of the successful molecules. 16% transferred from Academia to biotech, 8%, transferred from Academia to Pharma, at which points the billion+ dollars per NDA comes into play. Numbers are 10 years old now though, so I can't say the pattern still holds true.
http://blogs.sciencemag.org/pi... [sciencemag.org]
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"Yes, it also CAN cause costly boondoggles because there's little incentive for a cost/benefit analysis."
The contra-argument is that cost/benefit analysis are boondoggles by themselves when looking too afar/too in the blue sky, so having a (reduced) place where you can forget about those cost/benefit analysis is a savvy proposition in the long run.
Almost by definition, if the cost/benefit analysis is easy and clear and the ROI comparation between investment choices is obvious, you don't need the government
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Certainly a point to be made (Score:4, Insightful)
Rocketry and Artillery were both developed before Newtons laws of motion
Distilling and Steam Power were both around before thermodynamics
The compass was here long before Maxwell's equations.
The opposite points though are ridiculously easy to make.
No Semiconductor electronics without BCS band theory
No Atomic Power/Radiation therapy without Atomic theory
No Refrigeration without thermodynamics.
It seems the author is trying to make points by framing the debate in overly simplistic terms.
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I see why you posted AC
Carnot Cycle https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] 1824
Cats whisker diodes aren't engineering devices, and radiation therapy via rule of thumb, well it's a quicker death.
Thanks for providing three new examples of how Prof. Ridley is right...
Let me guess you're the opinionated Professor, or a student he wound up and set loose for this.
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Boyle's Law and Charles' Law predate that by many decades, and the basic laws of thermodynamics were developed and published around 1850. (I can only assume that there's a typo in your claim that the first thermodynamic textbooks were published in 1959).
So speculating on theories and testing hypothesis helped lead to development of refrigeration machinery before 1850, it's not like there was no thermodynam
This ain't no trickle down (Score:3, Insightful)
There's nothing left of the WSJ's journalistic integrity. Nothing at all.
This is nothing but a sad attempt to apply "trickle down" economic theory to technology. Sadly for the WSJ, trickle down is thoroughly discredited in economics. This attempt to smear technological innovation with the trickle down brush isn't even plausible. Easy enough to see that these guys didn't get any engineering in their educations. Sigh...
What next? Are they going to try to tell us that corporations are self-regulating? Wait....
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The only thing that trickles down is piss. That's what this jerk and the WSJ is really about.
op-ed garbage (Score:4, Funny)
just because there isn't "profit in it" doesn't make something doesn't mean it's worthless, it means you identify as a ferengi.
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I'll play devil's advocate (Score:2)
Please shoot me down here. I've never come up with a good answer to the above that wasn't so long winded I lost anyone I was talking to...
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the trouble with socialism is "Sooner or later you run out of Other People's Money"
that's not a problem with socialism, that's the problem with money.
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How about "You only run out if everyone stops earning and sometimes it is necessary to redistribute wealth so that society can keep earning"
Too many ideas (Score:2)
Though I like "You only run out when everyone stops earning". Shifts the argument towards job creation and investment.
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And that one gets countered with "I get to decide because I'm the one that got chosen by the group to decide. If you don't like it try to get the group to choose you or leave the group, I'm not keeping you here".
The big difference that seems to get lost is that the private sector and corporations are about money, and in today's world money is easily moveable. However Governments are about a people and a place. Inherently they have completely different drivers. If a company can make a profit destroying an
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""Sooner or later you run out of Other People's Money".
Please shoot me down here. I've never come up with a good answer to the above that wasn't so long winded I lost anyone I was talking to..."
What about "Sooner or later you run out of your Own Money Too", so what?
Technology evolves by jerks (Score:2)
...technology evolves by jerks...
Steve Jobs... Bill Gates... Jeff Bezos... yeah, it's sort of hard to argue the point.
TFA is absolutely right (Score:3)
Maxwell's equations which specify how electromagnetism works have been a complete waste of research dollars; a fiasco that has never led to any technological improvement or profit.
And all that money wasted on medical research has never led to a single profitable technology, nor increase in quality or length of life, never mind to any insight into why the four humours continue to kill people like flies.
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You forgot to mention all that wasted effort on quantum mechanics...just to build some silly chips out of sand and a few other bits. That Einstein guy was a whack job. Relativity, he had no thought for GPS technology. He should have waiting until we had GPS and then produced the theory showing how it could work.
This piece is hosted on the internet.. (Score:4, Informative)
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Probably, yes. The development of space exploration could be basically credited to the occurrence of the the second world war. Does that indicate the need for more world wars to advance human civilization?
Anecdotal evidence is inherently flawed here because, no matter what route we had taken, we could always point to whatever we did achieve and say "we wouldn't have that if we had done something else" and not be aware of anything we might have created instead. So it's a kind of evidence that can only supp
Innovation is a buzzword! (Score:2)
Government funding and corporate funding both have their perks and their shortcomings. But it's not such a strict divide as some paint it to be. Just like the divide between fundamental science and applied science isn't as clear cut as some like to narrate as. The late Pierre-Gilles de Gennes [wikipedia.org] stated many times how he loathed that later distinction. He stated that his work with industry development departments helped him spot practical issues that had to be systematically examined, which led him to theoretic
Watch Connections (Score:2)
Seriously, watch the original Connections series by James Burke if you want to understand how technology evolves.
Steam engine time (Score:2)
The old observation that 'steam engines were invented when it was steam engine time' is not a reflection on basic science, public or otherwise. Technological applications cluster because one development is a prerequisite for another, as well as creating demand that immediately pushes successive applications into being. The availability of electricity in the late nineteenth century drove a search for applications for it, leading to a number of different inventors proudly brandishing light bulbs at the same t
Letting kids build bombs (Score:2)
and experiment with chemicals and electronics while patting them on the back for doing a good job, drives innovation.
Ike was right again (Score:2)
A little quoted portion of his much quoted "military industrial complex" speech:
"The prospect of domination of the nation's scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present and is gravely to be regarded.
Yet, in holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientifictechnological elite."
http://coursesa.matrix.msu.edu... [msu.edu]
Bullshit, corporations can't wait decades (Score:5, Informative)
Basic science doesn't "drive" innovation, but basic science sure as hell enables innovation.
Einstein published his work on general relativity in 1915. The GPS system (which requires a knowledge of general relativity to design) began development in 1973.
Einstein published his work on stimulated emission in 1916. The first laser (which requires a knowledge of stimulated emission to design) was built in 1960.
For those keeping score, those are gaps of 58 and 44 years, respectively, to go from basic science to innovation. Neither of those innovations were simply bumbled into by tinkerers. The designers knew the science from the get-go, and the inventions would not have happened without knowing the science from the get-go. The days of Edison and similar tinkerers has long passed. Good luck inventing any modern technology by chance. The low hanging fruit have already been picked.
From TFA:
It follows that there is less need for government to fund science: Industry will do this itself. Having made innovations, it will then pay for research into the principles behind them.
Industry does not function on the timespan of 4, 5, or 6 DECADES. There is zero chance that modern industry could do that.* The argument in TFA is total bullshit.
*That said, once upon a time industry did kind of do this _a little_. I did research with Superconducting Quantum Interference Devices (SQUIDs), and I decided to look into the history of the devices. Where was the first SQUID made? Ford (the car company) research labs back in 1963 ( http://journals.aps.org/prl/ab... [aps.org] ). Once upon a time, large corporations were flush with cash and without shareholders who wanted to wring every ounce of profit from them, so corporations _sometimes_ funded basic research just because they could -- _sometimes_ without applications in mind. However, that has long gone the way of the dodo. And no, they didn't abandon the business because the government was funding it instead. Modern corporations will never spend the money to do real basic research because it is not economically useful (either in 1963 or now) to invent something and have someone else use it 5 decades later. They learned that lesson decades ago. Ford has never made use of a SQUID, and real applications are still on the horizon (tho they may not be far away today).
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They sort of had by then as well as illustrated by Edison's intense hate of alternating current that may as well have been voodoo to him since he had no desire to go near the maths required for an AC motor. Thus propaganda that set Tesla's personality and behaviour up as what we see as the mad scientist architype even today.
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> The GPS system (which requires a knowledge of general relativity to design)
Not so far as I can tell. It requires Newtonian orbital mechanics, Maxwell's equations for electromagnetic fields, very precise circuitry timing, and it is dependent on various quantum effects in subtle transistor design to make small. But there doesn't seem to be any core general relativity requirement. Accuracy losses from failure to handle the subtle orbital differences of relativistic rather than Newtonian orbits could be re
No, relativity really does matter for GPS (Score:2)
Allowing for relativistic effects makes it more accurate, but it would work fairly well without doing this.
No, GPS would be inaccurate to the point of being useless without accounting for relativistic effects. There are many references explaining this out there (see google), but here is one (emphasis added):
The combination of these two relativitic effects means that the clocks on-board each satellite should tick faster than identical clocks on the ground by about 38 microseconds per day (45-7=38)! This sounds small, but the high-precision required of the GPS system requires nanosecond accuracy, and 38 microseconds is 38,000 nanoseconds. If these effects were not properly taken into account, a navigational fix based on the GPS constellation would be false after only 2 minutes, and errors in global positions would continue to accumulate at a rate of about 10 kilometers each day! The whole system would be utterly worthless for navigation in a very short time. This kind of accumulated error is akin to measuring my location while standing on my front porch in Columbus, Ohio one day, and then making the same measurement a week later and having my GPS receiver tell me that my porch and I are currently somewhere in the air kilometers away.
http://www.astronomy.ohio-stat... [ohio-state.edu]
as a scientist... (Score:2)
I'm a scientist, I've benefited greatly from government grants for basic research. I've also worked in the government administering basic and applied research grants. There's a lot of truth to what he's saying.
The economic return of much (not all!) of basic research is near zero.
For those of you who keep pointing out the internet, you need to read this guy's thesis and look at the timeline of internet commercialization. Basic research investment did not lead directly to internet profitability. It took de
WSJ editorial, really? (Score:2)
What a shock to find an anti-science editorial in WSJ - surely by any measure the paper of record for plutocrats.
basic science gives rise to tech opportunities. isn't this obvious? the article actually claims that science is the result of tech, which I just cannot.
Mops up the crap makes room for the great (Score:2)
The private sector is amazing (Score:2)
They launched the first satellites, the first man into space and who could forget the great day when the employees of a mega corp walked on the moon. Their nuclear reactors are incredible too.
Matt Ridley really is the most insufferable prick (Score:2)
In a just world, he would be in jail for fucking up Northern Rock so appallingly. Instead, he gets to write articles on subjects about which he knows nothing.
Uh, wrong. (Score:2)
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do You think we don't have effective treatment for Cancer or HIV ? Because it is more "economic" to keep sick people alive than to cure them... we wouldn't have penicillin if it was up to the medico to decide.
The one word answer to that argument is Sovaldi: The biggest drug launch EVER is a cure for Hep. C. Here are three reasons why the "treatments are more profitable than cures" fails: Market share, time value of money, pricing power.
1. Market share. The first cure to enter a market full of treatments wouldn't have to fight it's competition, it would dominate from the get go.
2. Time value of money. A treatment, especially for a chronic disease, has the bulk of its revenue spread out over a decade to 15 year
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1. Yeah, and? How is making $25k per patient x 80 million patients over the course of five years and then running out of patients worse than making $2k per patient x 10 million patients per year for 10 years and then running out of patent?
2. Yes it does - for one paying interest directly cuts your ROI. for a second you didn't take into account risk. The longer it takes your drug to turn a profit, the less of a chance it will have of doing so because other drugs will enter the market and cut your profit mar
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I specificed Type 2 because >95% of the ~80 million diabetics in the US and the EU are Type 2. If the goal is to make t
Not really: NSA and quantum computers (Score:2)
You only say that because you are thinking of computers that are a generation behind the cutting edge of technology. Thankfully, the government is not as behind the times as you think.
The intelligence community (NSA et al.) are _major_ funders of quantum computing research in the USA (since working quantum computers could break current encryption methods, the NSA can't afford to get they second). The funding comes through IARPA -- NSA's equivalent of DARPA.
They've done a good enough job advancing the state
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As an interesting aside, I'm actually taking an interest in more VC opportunities. I think it's a better way for me to put my money where my mouth is. I also think it's potentially lucrative. From the folks I've spoken with, I'm not alone. I'd expect to see more VC outside of the, specifically, SV/tech-or-web-centric in the near future. There have also been some recent regulation changes that open VC up a bit more for individuals - sort of like private crowdfunding, I guess, is a way to describe it. I'll ha